A method and apparatus measures the presence of total residual oxidant species in aqueous environments. More specifically, the apparatus is operable to measure hypohalites (e.g., hypochlorite and hypobromite) in water containing halide salts using electrochemistry. The apparatus can be a sensor having four electrodes—a reference electrode, a working electrode, and two auxiliary electrodes. The fourth electrode, i.e., the second auxiliary electrode, can be used to generate ionized water near and in contact with the working electrode. The ionized water can clean the working electrode to minimize effects due to scaling or biofilm formation. As such, the working electrode does not need the capability to clean itself. Thus, other elements, originally believed to be unsuitable for use in saline aqueous environments, can be used for the electrodes, for example, gold.
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9. A microwire electrode assembly comprising:
a helix of gold microwire, the helix comprising:
a first end, the first end electrically connected to a sensor circuit;
at least one winding; and
an auxiliary electrode configured to operate as an alternate working electrode operable to clean the helix;
wherein the helix is operable to measure total residual oxidant (tro) in an aqueous environment and is positioned in proximity to the auxiliary electrode.
16. A method for measuring tro in an aqueous environment, the method comprising:
introducing a sensor into the aqueous environment, the sensor comprising a gold working electrode, a reference electrode, a first auxiliary electrode, and a second auxiliary electrode configured to operate as a working electrode;
measuring an amount of hypohalite in the aqueous environment; and
cleaning the surface of the gold working electrode with one of an acid or a base produced by at least one of the first auxiliary electrode and the second auxiliary electrode.
1. A sensor operable to measure total residual oxidant (tro) in an aqueous environment, comprising:
a working electrode operable to measure tro;
a reference electrode;
a first auxiliary electrode; and
a second auxiliary electrode;
wherein the second auxiliary electrode is configured to operate as at least one of: i) an alternate working electrode operable to clean the working electrode, ii) an auxiliary electrode electrically parallel to the first auxiliary electrode, and iii) in a single common enclosure with the working electrode, the reference electrode, and the first auxiliary electrode.
2. The sensor as defined in
4. The sensor as defined in
5. The sensor as defined in
6. The sensor as defined in
8. The sensor as defined in
10. The microwire electrode as defined in
12. The microwire electrode as defined in
13. The microwire electrode as defined in
14. The microwire electrode as defined in
a reference electrode; and
an auxiliary electrode, wherein, with the microwire electrode, measures tro.
15. The microwire electrode as defined in
17. The method as defined in
19. The method as defined in
the gold working electrode operable to measure tro;
a reference electrode;
the first auxiliary electrode; and
a second auxiliary electrode.
20. The method as defined in
21. The method as defined in
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This application claims priority to provisional patent application 61/223,216, filed Jul. 6, 2009, which is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety for all that it teaches.
The practice of eliminating unhealthy/biofouling microorganisms in water dates back to ancient civilizations. There are several methods to disinfect water, including brackish water, waste water and cooling water. Electrochemical methods can produce disinfection agents. Disinfection is not sterilization. Disinfection refers to the deactivation of “pathogen” (disease causing) microorganisms, whereas sterilization refers to the deactivation of all microorganisms present. Mechanisms for microorganism deactivation include the modification of, or attack on: the cell wall (e.g., rupture, property modification, etc.); the cell internal components (e.g., protoplasm or nucleic acid modification, alteration of protein synthesis, fatal induction of abnormal redox processes, etc.); and the enzymatic activity.
The most common disinfecting agents have properties as oxidants. This makes the disinfectants useful for the deactivation of most microorganisms, but also brings about undesirable effects, such as the discoloration of dyes, the corrosion of some metals, and the attack on some organic substances. These spurious properties of oxidants in some applications create an extra “load” thereby requiring the production of extra amounts of the disinfecting agent, increasing the corresponding costs, or requiring care to maintain the disinfecting agent concentration below levels that can cause damage, increasing collateral costs associated with treatment. Furthermore, some disinfecting agents produce “disinfection by-products” (DBP) upon their addition or reaction with organic substrates. Such DBP's are frequently toxic, as is the case with most chlorinated hydrocarbons. The main disinfectant agents produced via electrochemistry can be classified according to the oxidizing element: chlorine-based (e.g., chlorine gas, hypochlorite, hypochlorous acid, and chlorine dioxide); oxygen-based (e.g., ozone, hydrogen peroxide, and hydroxyl radicals); and others (e.g., permanganate, ferrate, ions of other transition metal ions (for example, copper and silver), percarbonate, persulfate, other halogens (for example, hypobromite, hypobromous acid) and derivatives (for example, mixed chlorine and bromine oxides), and the electrochemical manipulation of pH (i.e., the production of high levels of acidity or basicity)).
Reliable measurement of disinfection agents, especially chlorine-based or bromine-based hypohalites, has proven difficult in some circumstances. Automated water sampling systems can grab water samples for manual titration. However, this process is time consuming, does not produce near real-time measurements, and may not be performed in inaccessible systems. In some situations, sensors, based on amperometry, can be used. Amperometry is a generic term for a measurement that consumes the analyte and produces a measurable current that can be correlated to an amount of hypohalite or total residual oxidant in the solution. Total residual oxidant (TRO) measurement is often referred to as the measurement of an oxidant species or, more specifically, the measurement of chlorine using an electrochemical sensor or a titration-based approved standard method. Laypersons refer to electrolytic halogenation as chlorine, chlorination, or electrolytic chlorine generation (ECG) without particular attention to actual speciation.
However, finding the proper sensor to use for long-term measurement of TRO, especially in saline aqueous environments, has been difficult. Current chlorine amperometry sensors are not able to make functional long-term measurements without frequent and costly maintenance and calibration. In electrochemistry two or more electrodes may make a sensor that provides a measurement. The TRO sensor is a minimum three-electrode sensor that is also an amperometric sensor. Current amperometric sensors have many drawbacks.
Embodiments presented herein are generally directed to a method and apparatus to measure the presence of total residual oxidant species in saline aqueous environments. More specifically, the apparatus is operable to measure hypohalites (hypochlorite and hypobromite) in water containing halide salts using electrochemistry. The apparatus can be a sensor having four electrodes—a reference electrode, a working electrode, and two auxiliary electrodes. The fourth electrode, i.e., the second auxiliary electrode, can be operated as an alternate working electrode and used to generate ionized water near and in contact with the working electrode. The ionized water can clean the working electrode to minimize effects due to scaling or biofilm formation. As such, the working electrode does not need the capability to clean itself. Thus, other elements, originally believed to be unsuitable for use in saline aqueous environments, can be used for the working electrode, for example, gold.
The embodiments provide four electrodes, i.e., one working electrode, two auxiliary electrodes, and one reference electrode, that are operated and positioned in a fashion to maximize the surface stability and sensitivity of the working electrode to hypohalites (total residual oxidant). In embodiments, the working electrode is not an active participant in the cleaning steps but is cleaned by being electrically isolated from the electrochemical circuitry and being in intimate proximity to the fourth electrode.
The use of alternating electrodes allows the working electrode to be isolated from the circuit and, when positioned in substantial proximity to the auxiliary electrode and operated against electrode four to create changes in the water, clean the working electrode without degrading the working electrode. The electrical conditions required to clean the working electrode cannot be achieved by the working electrode directly because the metallic surface will dissolve into the saline water when operated at the potentials necessary to affect the water ionization for cleaning. However, by placing the working electrode in substantial proximity to the auxiliary electrode and then operating the auxiliary electrode in conjunction with electrode four, with the working electrode electrically isolated, varying pH can be achieved to maintain the surface of the working electrode. Thus, the working electrode can be made from sensitive metals.
This cleaning of the working electrode maintains the metallic surface of the working electrode in a fairly constant surface condition that provides for long-term measurement stability as a result of stable surface conditions. Typical metallic working electrodes suffer changes in the electrode condition such as surface oxidation, roughening or fouling that cause the measurement calibration to drift over time requiring the sensor to be either routinely cleaned, recalibrated, or both. In other embodiments, amperometric sensors use semi-permeable membranes to isolate the metallic electrodes from the saline water resulting in the need to further maintain the fragile, semi-permeable membrane.
The apparatus and method provide several advantages:
The phrases “at least one”, “one or more”, and “and/or” are open-ended expressions that are both conjunctive and disjunctive in operation. For example, each of the expressions “at least one of A, B and C”, “at least one of A, B, or C”, “one or more of A, B, and C”, “one or more of A, B, or C” and “A, B, and/or C” means A alone, B alone, C alone, A and B together, A and C together, B and C together, or A, B and C together.
The term “in communication with” as used herein refers to any coupling, connection, or interaction using electrical signals to exchange information or data, using any system, hardware, software, protocol, or format.
The term “a” or “an” entity refers to one or more of that entity. As such, the terms “a” (or “an”), “one or more” and “at least one” can be used interchangeably herein. It is also to be noted that the terms “comprising”, “including”, and “having” can be used interchangeably.
The term “automatic” and variations thereof, as used herein, refers to any process or operation done without material human input when the process or operation is performed. However, a process or operation can be automatic, even though performance of the process or operation uses material or immaterial human input, if the input is received before performance of the process or operation. Human input is deemed to be material if such input influences how the process or operation will be performed. Human input that consents to the performance of the process or operation is not deemed to be “material”.
The term hypohalite can mean any salt of a hypohalous acid, having a general formula M(OX)n.
The term analyte can mean any substance undergoing analysis.
A sensor can mean any arrangement of two or more electrode operable to analyze an analyte.
An electrode can mean a collector or emitter of electric charge in a sensor.
The present disclosure is described in conjunction with the appended figures:
In the appended figures, similar components and/or features may have the same reference label. Further, various components of the same type may be distinguished by following the reference label by a letter that distinguishes among the similar components. If only the first reference label is used in the specification, the description is applicable to any one of the similar components having the same first reference label irrespective of the second reference label.
The ensuing description provides embodiments only, and is not intended to limit the scope, applicability, or configuration of the claims. Rather, the ensuing description will provide those skilled in the art with an enabling description for implementing the embodiments. It being understood that various changes may be made in the function and arrangement of elements without departing from the spirit and scope of the appended claims.
An embodiment of a sensor 100, for measuring TRO, is shown in
The four electrodes include a working electrode 106, a reference electrode 108, a first auxiliary electrode 110 and a second auxiliary electrode 112 (also referred to as electrode four). The working electrode 106 can aid in measuring TRO in the aqueous solution. The working electrode 106 is the location at which reduction of the oxidant species takes place when the working electrode 106 is biased at an appropriate reduction potential with respect to the reference electrode 108. The working electrode 106 may be a metal, for example platinum or gold. Thus, when the working electrode 106 is biased at a value of less than +0.3 V versus a reference electrode 108, the working electrode's 106 surface will reduce hypohalites and produce a current proportional to concentration of the hypohalites and other environmental parameters, such as water flow. A gold surface on the working electrode 106 may be necessary to detect hypochlorite, whereas a graphite surface has been used to detect hypobromite. In an embodiment, the working electrode 106 is a gold microdisk array, such as the ABTECH MDEA 050 gold microdisk array sold by ABTECH Scientific, Inc. The microdisk array may have a diameter of approximately 7.5 mm and contain 5,184 discs each with a diameter of 50 μm producing a total electrochemical area of 10.17 mm2.
The first auxiliary electrode 110 is often called the counter electrode. The working electrode 106 is the electrode on which the reaction of interest occurs, and through which measurements are taken. The auxiliary electrode 110 changes in polarity opposite to that of the working electrode 110, but the current and polarity of auxiliary electrode 110 are not measured. The auxiliary electrode 110 exists to ensure that current does not run through the reference electrode 108 and often has a surface area much larger than that of the working electrode 106 to ensure that the reactions occurring on the working electrode 106 are not surface area limited by the counter electrode 110. In the example shown in
The reference electrode 108 is an electrode that has a standard, stable electrochemical potential (half-cell potential) that is used as a voltage standard against which voltages are applied to the working electrode 106. In the example in
The second auxiliary electrode or electrode four 112 is novel. Electrode four 112, at times, acts as a supplemental auxiliary electrode that functions in parallel to the auxiliary electrode 110. (to increase the total surface area of the functional auxiliary electrode). At other times, electrode four 112 acts as a working electrode in place of the normal working electrode 106 to clean the normal working electrode 106. Here, electrode four 112 creates a higher potential, e.g., above 0.7 volts, to ionize the solution that is in contact with the working electrode 106. The ionized water has attributes of either high or low pH. Thus, the basicity or acidity of the water acts to “clean” the surface of the working electrode 106. Electrode four 112 can be made of materials suitable to function as an electrode. In embodiments, electrode four 112 is made of glassy carbon and is a disk having a diameter of 5 mm with an area of 19.6 mm2.
In prior art sensor development, −0.5 V is used as the negative potential pulse and +0.7 V as the positive potential pulse on the working electrode. The −0.5 V is not sufficient to generate hydrogen, and the +0.7 V is not positive enough to generate oxygen in seawater allowing for a stable long-term cleaning action. Thus, at the prior art voltages, the working electrode would become fouled by biofilm. Further, the working electrode could not be gold if the working electrode was to clean itself, as was common in three electrode systems. The positive potential that may be applied to the working electrode is limited by the gold surface employed for increased sensitivity to chlorine. At a potential more positive than 0.7 V, gold is dissolved (oxidized) away in the presence of chloride.
To function properly, electrode four 112 is introduced in close or intimate proximity to the working electrode 106. In embodiments, electrode four 112 may be used to clean the surface of the working electrode 106. The intimate proximity of the working electrode 106 and electrode four 112 depends on the flow of the solution, the level of potential created at electrode four 112, the shape and size of the enclosure 102, etc. The embodiment shown in
Another embodiment of the sensor 100 is shown in
Another embodiment of the sensor 100 is shown in
The reference electrode 108 is positioned outside of the enclosure. A unique microwire working electrode 106 is position within a first channel 118a while the auxiliary electrode 110 is position within the second channel 118b. An embodiment of the microwire electrode 106 is described in conjunction with
An embodiment of a microwire electrode 400 is shown in
Further, the microwire electrode 400 can produce greater electrical fields compared to the microdisk electrode. Referring to
The a single winding of the microwire electrode 402 is shown in
In embodiments, the helix may be supported by or affixed on a substructure 404 as shown in
The dimensions in the microwire electrode dictate how the microwire will perform. The diameter of the microwire, the spacing of the windings of the helix, and the rate of the flow 406 of the solution past the microwire sensor 400, the potential applied to the microwire, and the measurement duration are important to the function of the microwire electrode 400 based sensor. As the electrode 400 measures hypohalites, the electrical potential created on the microwire 402 can cause some of the hypohalite to be consumed. The consumption of the hypohalite can cause errant readings on windings further downstream if the solution, with the consumed hypohalite, passes the windings. If the measurement time interval (i.e., the period between successive measurements) is set at a predetermined level that is sufficiently short (which is based on flow rate, potential created at the microwire windings, the diameter of the microwire, the distance between the microwire windings, etc.), the microwire electrode 400 can result in measurement insensitivity to flow rate. Thus, the factors mentioned above must be controlled and determined to create a functioning microwire sensor. One skilled in the art will understand how the factors interact and how to change the winding distance to create a functioning sensor.
An electrical diagram of an embodiment of the sensor 100 is shown in
The sensor 100 can include at least one switch 502a and 502b. Switch 502a and switch 502b can work in concert to place the sensor 100 either into a measurement configuration or a cleaning configuration. With switch A 502a in a position 0 and switch B 502b in a position 0 or 1 (table 508) the sensor 100 is in a measurement configuration and can measure a current, or a current as a potential, to determine an amount of hypohalite in the solution in which the electrodes reside. With switch A 502a in a position 0 and switch B 502b in a position 0 (table 508) the sensor cleans the working electrode 106. In this configuration, the working electrode 106 “floats,” that is, the working electrode 106 is neither connected to a power source or to ground. Further, electrode four 112 is connected to a power source to create a potential at electrode four 112. The potential at electrode four 112 electrolytically creates either an acid or a base solution (depending on whether the potential is positive or negative) that cleans the working electrode 106. The acidic or basic solution may be alternated during successive or subsequent cleanings Electrochemical(ly) can mean of or relating to a chemical reaction brought about by electricity. Electrolytically means produced by or used in the process of the producing of chemical changes by passage of an electric current through an electrolyte. The configuration of the sensor 100 can be oscillated or switched back and forth between measurement and cleaning.
An embodiment of a method 600 for operating the four electrode sensor 100 is shown in
The function of the four-electrode, amperometric sensor 100 is to alternate the sensor operation between modes of (1) oxidant measurement, (2) conductivity measurement, (3) proton generation near the working electrode 106 and (4) hydroxyl generation near the working electrode. Since the working electrode 106 cannot participate in the hydrolysis events (because gold dissolves in chloride environments when energized above +0.7 Volts), the second auxiliary electrode 112 is placed very close to the face of the working electrode 106 and the first auxiliary electrode 110 is placed further away.
The sensor 100 is introduced into the measurement environment, in step 604. The sensor 100 is a four electrode sensor 100. The working electrode 106 of the sensor 100 can be gold. The measurement environment may be a test environment or an actual field environment where the sensor 100 is being used. In embodiments, the environment is a saline aqueous solution that may contain hypohalites, which may be chlorine or bromine based. The saline aqueous solution may be seawater.
The sensor 100 can take a measurement using the working electrode 106, in step 606. In the measurement of total residual oxidant the ideal electrode material for the working electrode 106 is gold. However, gold has an upper bound on the applied potential, if this potential is exceeded, the gold is electrochemically dissolved into the solution as noted above. In the measurement mode, switches 502 are set to the position where the two auxiliary electrodes 110 and 112 are connected in parallel and act as a single larger area auxiliary electrode. In some embodiments, only one of the auxiliary electrodes 110 or 112 is connected. A measurement of total residual oxidant, with a reduction of the analyte at the working electrode 106, results in a current passing through the working electrode 106 that is proportional to the analyte concentration. This current is converted to a potential, by a current to voltage converter 510, and subjected to conversion to a digital value for processing by a microprocessor as is understood by those skilled in the art.
The sensor 100 can transition to a cleaning mode. In the cleaning mode, the analog switches 502 are set to the position where the working electrode 106 is electrically isolated from the circuit. In other words, the sensor 100 configuration floats the working electrode 106, in step 608. Further, in the configuration, electrode four 112 takes on the function of the working electrode.
An electrical potential is then created on electrode 4 112, in step 610. Cleaning of the working electrode 106 (where the halogen reduction occurs) can be performed electrochemically through the application of alternating negative and positive potentials to electrode 4 112. Calcium and magnesium can solidify onto electrode surfaces but the mechanism for elemental precipitation, as hydroxides, on any surfaces may also apply for the electrodes. The cycling of alkaline and acidic conditions at the electrode surface have been previously shown to prevent hydroxides from precipitating and thus can keep the electrode clean. Hydrogen evolution occurs at a negative potential and oxygen evolution occurs at a positive potential. The change in pH can clean the contaminants precipitated from water onto the working electrode 106, in step 612. Thus, the intimate proximity of the working electrode 106 and electrode 4 112 is important to allow the generated hydroxyls and protons to flow over and clean the gold surface of the working electrode 106. Further, the potential applied to electrode 4 112 may need to be greater than +1.0 V to generate sufficient protons and less than −1.0V to generate sufficient hydroxyls to effect the surface cleaning.
The system in communication with the sensor 100 may then determine if another measurement is needed, in step 614. In embodiments, the system takes periodic measurements with the sensor 100. In this situation, the system determines if the period of time between measurements has elapsed and starts the process of measurement again. In other embodiments, the system is directed by input from a human tester. A human tester may direct a measurement. If a directive is received, the system starts the process of measurement again. If a new measurement is needed, the process 600 flows “YES” back to step 606. If a new measurement is not needed, the process 600 flows “NO” to end operation 616.
Using this process repeatedly, the sensor 100 can reach equilibrium and provide quick and effective measurement of TRO in saline aqueous solutions. The concentration of hypohalites may then be adjusted (by adding chemicals, through electrochemical means, etc.) according to the measurements. The adjustments may then be verified through method 600. In this way, disinfection, and possibly sterilization, of the aqueous solution can occur.
An embodiment for manufacturing a microwire electrode 400 is shown in
Place the top 410 of the substrate 404 into a rotary tool that is mounted in a fixed position, in step 712. Optionally, adhere the gold wire 402 by placing a small amount of JB Weld Kwik over the gold wire 402 where the gold wire 402 exits the bottom side hole to hold the gold wire 402 in place, in step 714. Wind the substrate 404 to create the helical windings of the gold wire 402 in step 716. In embodiments, step 716 creates 27 turns of gold wire 402 on the substrate 404. Tack the gold wire 402 into place using JB Weld Kwik, in step 718. Feed the remaining gold wire 402 through an upper side hole, in step 718. It may be prudent to apply one turn after the tack location to prevent kinking the gold wire 402 during the termination steps.
Thread the remaining gold wire 402 into the upper side hole, in step 720. Thread only the amount necessary for the tip of the gold wire 402 to exit the top hole. Remove the substrate 404 from the rotary tool and pull the slack out of the gold wire 402 to make sure that the gold wire 402 is still properly seated into the upper side hole, in step 722. Twist the lead gold wires 402 together by rotating the ends of the gold wire 402, in step 724.
Cut a length of wire (e.g., 70 mm piece of 1 mm diameter silver wire), in step 726. Coat a portion of the cut wire (e.g., 20 mm of the silver wire) with epoxy, e.g., (a thin layer of Ellsworth epoxy), in step 728. Place the epoxy coated end of the silver wire into the top end 410 of the substrate 404, in step 730. Seat the silver wire into the bottom of the substrate 404, in step 732. Wrap the protruding gold wire 402 loosely around the silver wire, in step 734. Solder (e.g., using 0.15″ diameter 63/37 solder) the silver wire to the gold wire 402, in step 736. Epoxy, (e.g., using Ellsworth epoxy) the silver wire and open side holes, in step 738. Cure the epoxy, in step 740.
Specific details were given in the description to provide a thorough understanding of the embodiments. However, it will be understood by one of ordinary skill in the art that the embodiments may be practiced without these specific details. For example, elements of the embodiments may be shown in block diagrams in order not to obscure the embodiments in unnecessary detail. In other instances, well-known circuits, processes, algorithms, structures, and techniques may be shown without unnecessary detail in order to avoid obscuring the embodiments.
Also, it is noted that the embodiments were described as a process which is depicted as a flowchart, a flow diagram, a data flow diagram, a structure diagram, or a block diagram. Although a flowchart may describe the operations as a sequential process, many of the operations can be performed in parallel or concurrently. In addition, the order of the operations may be re-arranged. A process is terminated when its operations are completed, but could have additional steps not included in the figure. A process may correspond to a method, a function, a procedure, a subroutine, a subprogram, etc. When a process corresponds to a function, its termination corresponds to a return of the function to the calling function or the main function.
This application contains an appendix with further materials describing the sensor 100, the microwire electrode 400, and the operation and methods described herein. The appendix is hereby incorporated as part of the application for all that it teaches.
While illustrative embodiments of the invention have been described in detail herein, it is to be understood that the inventive concepts may be otherwise variously embodied and employed, and that the appended claims are intended to be construed to include such variations, except as limited by the prior art.
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